Literature DB >> 18636724

Formation and bonding of alane clusters on Al(111) surfaces studied by infrared absorption spectroscopy and theoretical modeling.

Santanu Chaudhuri1, Sylvie Rangan, Jean-Francois Veyan, James T Muckerman, Yves J Chabal.   

Abstract

Alanes are believed to be the mass transport intermediate in many hydrogen storage reactions and thus important for understanding rehydrogenation kinetics for alanates and AlH3. Combining density functional theory (DFT) and surface infrared (IR) spectroscopy, we provide atomistic details about the formation of alanes on the Al(111) surface, a model environment for the rehydrogenation reactions. At low coverage, DFT predicts a 2-fold bridge site adsorption for atomic hydrogen at 1150 cm(-1), which is too weak to be detected by IR but was previously observed in electron energy loss spectroscopy. At higher coverage, steps are the most favorable adsorption sites for atomic H adsorption, and it is likely that the AlH3 molecules form (initially strongly bound to steps) at saturation. With increasing exposures AlH3 is extracted from the step edge and becomes highly mobile on the terraces in a weakly bound state, accounting for step etching observed in previous STM studies. The mobility of these weakly bound AlH3 molecules is the key factor leading to the growth of larger alanes through AlH3 oligomerization. The subsequent decomposition and desorption of alanes is also investigated and compared to previous temperature programmed desorption studies.

Entities:  

Year:  2008        PMID: 18636724     DOI: 10.1021/ja800136k

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  1 in total

1.  Turning aluminium into a noble-metal-like catalyst for low-temperature activation of molecular hydrogen.

Authors:  Irinder S Chopra; Santanu Chaudhuri; Jean François Veyan; Yves J Chabal
Journal:  Nat Mater       Date:  2011-09-25       Impact factor: 43.841

  1 in total

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